So I wish mainstream media and right wing talk shows would quit lumping them together. In Egypt the Muslim Brotherhood is in power and egging on extremists (their new president's first act was to demand the release of the Blind Sheik....which, by the way, the Administration is eerily silent about, as if they might do it.)

Hundreds of protesters angry over last week's killing of the
U.S. ambassador to Libya stormed the compound of the Islamic extremist
militia suspected in the attack, evicting militiamen and setting fire to
their building Friday.
In an unprecedented show of public anger
at Libya's rampant militias, the crowd overwhelmed the compound of the
Ansar al-Shariah Brigade in the center of the eastern city of Benghazi.
Ansar
al-Shariah fighters initially fired in the air to disperse the crowd,
but eventually abandoned the site with their weapons and vehicles after
it was overrun by waves of protesters shouting "No to militias."

They don't want al-Qaeda there.

"I don't want to see armed men wearing Afghani-style clothes stopping me
in the street to give me orders, I only want to see people in uniform,"
said Omar Mohammed, a university student who took part in the takeover
of the site, which protesters said was done in support of the army and
police.

news coverage that fits a precast narrative of religious fanaticism
has left the wrong impression. Witness coverage of the June 7
demonstration in Benghazi's Freedom Square (where the revolution began).
We saw pictures of 300 Kalashnikov-toting young men gathered from all
corners of Libya waving the black flags of jihad, claiming that
democracy is atheistic, insisting that only a government that enforces
religion is legitimate. Check. It fits the narrative; end of coverage.
What wasn't widely reported was the locals' reaction to this
demonstration: A spontaneous, social media-driven counter-demonstration
that made the hard-liners go home. Freedom Square was flooded by
thousands of Benghazis - many of them women in veils - who were
horrified at this attempt to redefine their revolution and their
religion. The counter-demonstrators were Muslims, too; they see Islam as
compatible with free democracy. They appear to sense - like Tocqueville
- that religion is ultimately more persuasive when it is not entwined
with the power of the state.
Imagine the spectacle of hundreds of armed young militiamen turned
away by the unarmed women and men of Benghazi! This was a teachable
moment. It reveals the Libyan character in the wake of the revolution.
Indeed, days before the election, Libya's top cleric went on TV to issue
a fatwa instructing citizens not to vote for what he called "secular"
parties. The overwhelming majority of Libyans promptly went out and
ignored this advice.

So, yes, there is an Arab Spring. It might be limited to Libya and I don't know if their fragile democracy is already falling apart. But Libya ain't Egypt and it deserves the support of freedom-lovers. It breaks my heart to hear them lumped together by folks who are rightly mad about the storming of our consulates all over the world, but unconscionably ignorant.